Memphis workers reflect on Martin Luther
King Jr. assassination 50 years later
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[March 29, 2018]
By Kia Johnson
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (Reuters) - A half century
ago, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. came to Memphis to march in support of
the city's striking sanitation workers. It was the last trip the Baptist
minister turned civil rights leader would make in the name of social
justice.
On April 4, 1968, the day before the march was to begin, King, 39, was
fatally shot on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel by an avowed
segregationist.
A month earlier, King led the sanitation workers in a march through the
Tennessee city that erupted in violent clashes. Even so, he vowed to
return for a second march, convinced that the strikers would prevail in
what he saw as a fight for economic justice.
King's commitment made a deep impression on the strikers.
Henry Leach, who participated in the strike 50 years ago, said King came
to the city for justice, not violence.
"He came to help us get what we wanted. Like I tell you, he became like
a father to us," Leach, a former sanitation worker who participated in
the strike 50 years ago, said recently.
The evening before the second march, the Nobel Peace Prize winner
delivered his famous "I've Been to the Mountaintop" sermon at a local
church.
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Sanitation workers collect refuse from a truck decorated with images
honoring civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., who was shot
and killed in Memphis in 1968 while championing their cause as
workers, in Memphis, Tennessee, U.S. March 28, 2018.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Michael Halloway, a Memphis sanitation worker, said he believed that
King would have mixed feelings about the current state of U.S. race
relations.
"It makes me very sad because you know he came here to fight for the
rights for us," he said. "It's getting better and better now, but
it's got a long way to go," Halloway said.
(Reporting by Kia Johnson; Writing by Suzannah Gonzales; Editing by
Richard Chang)
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